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A painter
remembered most for his beach scenes of carefree atmosphere, Edward
Potthast was one of the significant 19th-century American artists
from Cincinnati, which at the time of his birth was a burgeoning
art center. It was also a place of refuge for German immigrants
including the Potthast family.
He first studied at
the McMicken School of Design and at the Cincinnati Academy, and
then went to Europe briefly before becoming established in his
native city as a lithographer and illustrator.
In 1892, he moved to
New York City where he won the Clarke Prize at the National Academy
and many other honors. In 1910, he was part of a Santa Fe Railroad
sponsored trip to the Grand Canyon that included Thomas Moran.
The group spent ten days painting on the South Rim of the Canyon,
and this experience was so stimulating to him that he returned
to the West several times, developing a tonalist style of painting
night scenes.
His studio was primarily
in New York City, but in 1912, he spent extensive time in Europe
where he enrolled in Academies in Munich, Antwerp and Paris. He
divided his time between illustrations for "Harper's"
and "Scribner's" magazines but later gave up illustration
for full time fine art. He was an exceedingly private person who
died at his easel
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